In patients with nonatherosclerotic spontaneous coronary artery dissection, 72% had fibromuscular dysplasia and 67% had type 2 SCAD, with a two-year major adverse cardiac event rate of 10.4%.
168 patients with nonatherosclerotic spontaneous coronary artery dissection (NA-SCAD) evaluated at Vancouver General Hospital (48 retrospectively identified, 120 prospectively identified). Mean age 52.1 years, 92.3% women (62.3% postmenopausal). All presented with myocardial infarction.
Observational cohort assessing predisposing conditions (e.g., fibromuscular dysplasia), precipitating stressors, angiographic characteristics, and management strategies (conservative therapy vs. percutaneous coronary intervention or coronary artery bypass surgery).
In-hospital events, long-term major adverse cardiac events (MACE), and angiographic healing at follow-up.hard clinical
NA-SCAD predominantly affects women, is strongly associated with fibromuscular dysplasia, and conservative management is viable and associated with spontaneous angiographic healing, whereas PCI carries a high risk of complications.
Absolute Event Rate: 0% vs 0%
Background— Nonatherosclerotic spontaneous coronary artery dissection (NA-SCAD) is underdiagnosed and an important cause of myocardial infarction in young women. The frequency of predisposing and precipitating conditions and cardiovascular outcomes remains poorly described. Methods and Results— Patients with NA-SCAD prospectively evaluated (retrospectively or prospectively identified) at Vancouver General Hospital were included. Angiographic SCAD diagnosis was confirmed by 2 experienced interventional cardiologists and categorized as type 1 (multiple lumen), 2 (diffuse stenosis), or 3 (mimic atherosclerosis). Fibromuscular dysplasia screening of renal, iliac, and cerebrovascular arteries were performed with angiography or computed tomographic angiography/MR angiography. Baseline, predisposing and precipitating conditions, angiographic, revascularization, in-hospital, and long-term events were recorded. We prospectively evaluated 168 patients with NA-SCAD. Average age was 52.1±9.2 years, 92.3% were women (62.3% postmenopausal). All presented with myocardial infarction. ECG showed ST-segment elevation in 26.1%, and 3.6% had ventricular tachycardia/ventricular fibrillation arrest. Fibromuscular dysplasia was diagnosed in 72.0%. Precipitating emotional or physical stress was reported in 56.5%. Majority had type 2 angiographic SCAD (67.0%), only 29.1% had type 1, and 3.9% had type 3. The majority (134/168) were initially treated conservatively. Overall, 6 of 168 patients had coronary artery bypass surgery and 33 of 168 had percutaneous coronary intervention in-hospital. Of those treated conservatively (n=134), 3 required revascularization for SCAD extension, and all 79 who had repeat angiogram ≥26 days later had spontaneous healing. Two-year major adverse cardiac events were 16.9% (retrospectively identified group) and 10.4% (prospectively identified group). Recurrent SCAD occurred in 13.1%. Conclusions— Majority of patients with NA-SCAD had fibromuscular dysplasia and type 2 angiographic SCAD. Conservative therapy was associated with spontaneous healing. NA-SCAD survivors are at risk for recurrent cardiovascular events, including recurrent SCAD.
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Jacqueline Saw
Interventional Cardiology
Eve Aymong
Interventional Cardiology
Tara Sedlak
General Cardiology
Circulation Cardiovascular Interventions
St. Michael's Hospital
St. Paul's Hospital
St Michaels Hospital
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Saw et al. (Wed,) reported a other. In patients with nonatherosclerotic spontaneous coronary artery dissection, 72% had fibromuscular dysplasia and 67% had type 2 SCAD, with a two-year major adverse cardiac event rate of 10.4%.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69898a05810bd1b401d0af85 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/circinterventions.114.001760